In 2006, a scandal erupted at Hewlett Packard when it
was discovered that Patricia Dunn, then the company's
chairwoman, had hired spies to monitor journalists
covering HP and its board members. Using a technique
called pretexting, the spies posed as someone else to
trace leaks. To quell public outrage, Congress passed a
law banning pretexting. Yet as investigative journalist
Eamon Javers shows, the incident at HP is not unique.
Industrial espionage is a multibillion-dollar enterprise
with tentacles reaching across the globe. Intelligence
companies are setting up fake websites, trailing
individuals, dumpster-diving in private and corporate
trash, using ultra-sophisticated satellite surveillance,
and hacking secure computer networks. Their activities
raise crucial moral and legal questions for a world ever
more interconnected by globalisation.Built on reporting,
including exclusive interviews with some of the world's
top corporate surveillance experts and unprecedented
access, ''Broker, Trader, Lawyer, Spy'' is a shocking
expose of the sordid world of corporate espionage and
its historic cast, including Allan Pinkerton, the
nation's first 'private eye', tycoons and playboys,
presidents and FBI operatives, CEOs and accountants,
Cold War veterans and military personnel, and Howard
Hughes' private CIA. This book is sure to change the way
readers look at business - and their own
companies. |
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